SHALINI SATKUNANANDAN Department of Political Science University of California, Davis 571 Kerr Hall, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616 ssatkunanandan@ucdavis.edu (510) 542-7475 CURRENT POST Assistant Professor, University of California, Davis, Department of Political Science, July 2011 PREVIOUS ACADEMIC POSITIONS Full-time Lecturer, University of California, Davis, Department of Political Science, July 2010 June 2011 Harper-Schmidt Fellow in the Society of Fellows in the Liberal Arts, and Collegiate Assistant Professor in the Social Sciences Collegiate Division, University of Chicago September 2007 August 2010 EDUCATION Ph.D., Jurisprudence and Social Policy Program, University of California, Berkeley, December 2007 Dissertation: The Turn: Plato, Kant, and Heidegger on the Encounter with the Ground of Obligation Committee: Professors Philippe Nonet (Chair), Christopher Kutz, Samuel Scheffler (Philosophy and J.S.P), and Wendy Brown (Political Science) B.A. (Hons. First Class), LL.B. (Hons. First Class equivalent), University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia, May 1999 PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATIONS Books EXTRAORDINARY RESPONSIBILITY: POLITICS BEYOND THE MORAL CALCULUS, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015) First Book Award, Foundations of Political Theory, American Political Science Association, 2015 (co-recipient) Reviewed in The Times Literary Supplement, March 25 2016, p. 26; Choice May 2016; and Survival Vol. 28 (3) May 2016 Subject of critical dialogue with Antonio Y. Vázquez-Arroyo in Perspectives on Politics Vol. 15 (4) November 2017, pp. 1108-113
Articles Drawing Rein: Shame and Reverence in Plato s Law-bound Polity and Ours Political Theory (forthcoming) Bureaucratic Passions, Journal of Law, Culture, and the Humanities, (forthcoming) Max Weber and the Ethos of Politics Beyond Calculation, American Political Science Review, Vol. 108 (1) February 2014, 169-181 Speaking Faith to Modern Law, Journal of Law, Culture, and the Humanities, Vol. 9 (1) February 2013, 26-38 The Extraordinary Categorical Imperative, Political Theory, Vol. 39 (2) April 2011, 234-260 The Ethical Value of Red Tape: The Role of Specialized Institutions for Ensuring Accountability in NSW, Australian Journal of Public Administration, Vol. 58 (1) March 1999 (with Carmel Niland) OTHER PUBLICATIONS Book review of Ella Myers, WORLDLY ETHICS: DEMOCRATIC POLITICS AND CARE FOR THE WORLD, Political Theory, Vol. 44 (4) August 2016, 589-593 Book review of Patchen Markell, BOUND BY RECOGNITION, Journal of Law, Culture, and the Humanities, Vol. 2 (2) June 2006 With Garth Nettheim, The Recognition of Aboriginal Customary Law in the Northern Territory: Past Proposals, Current Debates and Future Options, Indigenous Law Centre, University of New South Wales, April 1999 MANUSCRIPTS IN PROGRESS AND UNDER REVIEW Nietzsche s Faith-based Self-fashioning (article-length manuscript) Academic Faiths (article-length manuscript) New book project, RELIGIOUS OBSERVANCE: THE POLITICS OF ACADEMIC FAITHS. An investigation of the search for a reasonable religion or acceptable faith in contemporary politics and political theory, in part through comparison with versions of this project in the history of political thought (in progress) ACADEMIC AWARDS AND HONORS Foundations of Political Theory (Organized Section of the American Political Science Association), First Book Award, co-recipient 2015 U.C. Davis Publication Assistance Fund Award, Spring 2015 Page 2
Hellman Fellow, 2014 2015 ($25,000 grant for second book project) Kadish Center for Law, Morality and Public Affairs Fellowship, 2002-2003 U.C. Berkeley Academic Progress Award, Spring 2003 U.C. Berkeley Outstanding Graduate Student Instructor Award, 2001-2002 Fulbright Postgraduate Student Award, 1999 University of New South Wales University Medal for Political Science, 1997 School of Political Science Honors Year Prize for Best Performance in Political Science Honors, University of New South Wales, 1997 INVITED TALKS Introductory remarks for seminar on EXTRAORDINARY RESPONSIBILITY: POLITICS BEYOND THE MORAL CALCULUS, as part of the Compromise Project, Department of Political Science, University of Copenhagen, October 2016 (with commentary by Anders Berg-Sørensen, Mika Ojakangas, David Owen, and Christian Rostbøll) Max Weber on Being a Politician, lecture to undergraduates, Department of Political Science, University of Copenhagen, October 2016 Neither Religious nor Spiritual: Nietzsche s Illiberal, Faith-based Self- Fashioning, Political Theory Workshop, Department of Political Science, University of Wisconsin, Madison, April 2016 Neither Religious nor Spiritual: Nietzsche s Illiberal, Faith-based Self- Fashioning, Department of Rhetoric Colloquium, University of California, Berkeley, March 2016 Morality s Debt Perspective, Harvard Political Theory Colloquium, November 2014 Morality as a Way of Seeing, General Aspects of Legal Analysis ( GALA ) Seminar, Berkeley Law, University of California, Berkeley, September 2013 The Calls of Conscience and Calculation, Law and Contemporary Theory (Townsend Center) Working Group, Department of Rhetoric, University of California, Berkeley, November 2013 Plato on why Philosophers should Rule, Politics Department Colloquium, University of California, Santa Cruz, February 2011 The Grundlegung as Turn, Political Theory Workshop, Department of Political Science, University of Chicago, May 2008 Page 3
CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS Revisiting Max Weber s Sacrifice of the Intellect at the annual meeting for the Association for Political Theory, Ann Arbor, October 2017 Chair for workshop panel on Political Judgment at the annual meeting for the Association for Political Theory, Ann Arbor, October 2017 Discussant for panel on Alexander Livingston s DAMN GREAT EMPIRES!: WILLIAM JAMES AND THE POLITICS OF PRAGMATISM at the annual meeting of the Western Political Science Association, Vancouver, Canada, April 2017 Discussant for panel Judgment and Responsibility at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Philadelphia, September 2016 The Truth about Academic Faiths, presented at the annual meeting of the Western Political Science Association, San Diego, March 2016. Also presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Philadelphia, September 2016 Discussant for panel Ancient Political Theory at the annual meeting of the Western Political Science Association, San Diego, March 2016 Discussant for panel on Joel Schlosser s WHAT WOULD SOCRATES DO? SELF-EXAMINATION, CIVIC ENGAGEMENT, AND THE POLITICS OF PHILOSOPHY at the annual meeting of the Western Political Science Association, Las Vegas, April 2015. Was Nietzsche the Religion-Founding Type?, presented at the annual meeting of the Western Political Science Association, Las Vegas, March 2015. Also presented at the annual meeting of the Association for Political Theory, University of Colorado, Boulder, October 2015 Plato, Law, Awe, presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, San Francisco, September 2015. Also presented at the annual meeting of Association for Political Theory, University of Wisconsin, Madison, October 2014; at the University of California, Davis Political Theory Workshop, May 2014; and at the annual meeting of the Association for the Study of Law, Culture, and the Humanities, University of Virginia, School of Law, March 2014 Discussant for panel Political Theory and the Persuasive Power of Style, at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Chicago, August 2013 Page 4
Faith without a Sacrifice of the Intellect, presented at the annual meeting of the Western Political Science Association Hollywood, California, March 2013 Max Weber and the Ethos of Politics Beyond Calculation, presented at the annual conference of the Association for Political Theory, Columbia, South Carolina, October 2012; and at the University of California, Davis Political Theory Workshop, June 2012 Seeing Like a Christian, presented at the annual meeting of the Western Political Science Association San Antonio, Texas, April 2011 What Kierkegaard would have said about Joel Handler s Post- Modernism, Protest, and the New Social Movements, presented at roundtable on Joel Handler's 1992 Law and Society Association Presidential Address, "Post-modernism, Protest and New Social Movements, at the Annual Meeting of the Law and Society Association, Chicago, May 2010 Speaking Faith to Modern Law presented at the University of Chicago s Society of Fellows Weissbourd Conference, April 2010 Here I stand, I can do no other : Reading Darkness at Noon with Politics as a Vocation," presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Boston, September 2008 Discussant for panel Plato and the Platonic Tradition at the annual meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, April 2008 What is a Call? The Problem of the Will in Heidegger s Account of a Conversion, presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Philadelphia, September 2006 Saving the Sacred from Technique: A Reading of Immanuel Kant s Religion within the Boundaries of Mere Reason, presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Washington, D.C., September 2005 Plato on Paideia under the Rule of Law, presented at the annual meeting of the Association for the Study of Law, Culture, and the Humanities, Austin, Texas, March 2005 Plato on Law and Conversion, presented at the annual meeting of the Western Political Science Association, Oakland, California, March 2005 Post-Cold War Constitutional Preambles and Approaches to Political Foundation, presented at the annual meeting of the Law and Society Association, Budapest, July 2001 Page 5
COURSES TAUGHT U.C. Davis Graduate: Nietzsche on Responsibility Beyond Good and Evil; Plato on Law; Rational Religions Old and New; Nietzsche and Religion; Max Weber on Religion and Politics; Nietzsche s Thus Spoke Zarathustra U.C. Davis Undergraduate: Ancient Political Thought; Late Modern Political Thought; Plato s Republic; Nietzsche s Critique of Modernity University of Chicago Undergraduate: Classics of Social and Political Thought Part One (Ancient); Classics of Social and Political Thought, Part Two (Early Modern/Modern); Classics of Social and Political Thought, Part Three (Modern/Late Modern) PROFESSIONAL SERVICE Member, Association for Political Theory 2016 Program Committee Article reviewer: American Political Science Review; Contemporary Political Theory; Journal of Politics; Journal of Law, Culture and the Humanities; Political Theory; Polity; South African Journal of Philosophy DEPARTMENTAL AND UNIVERSITY SERVICE Undergraduate Advisor (2015-2016) Graduate Council Graduate Student Support Subcommittee (2015-2016) Undergraduate Affairs Committee (2016-2017) Political Theory Exam Committee (2011-17; 2013-14, Chair) Speakers and Visitors Committee (2011-2013; 2014-2015; 2015-2016; 2016-2017) Graduate Affairs Committee (2012-2013; 2015-2016) STUDENT ADVISING Ph.D. Students: Christopher Hallenbrook (2015, Lecturer, Bloomsburg University); Alison Gushue (in progress); Cosmo Houck (in progress); Joel Landis (in progress); Robert Lee McNish (2017, Lecturer California State University, Chico); Michelle Schwarze (2013, Assistant Professor, University of Wisconsin, Madison) B.A. Students: Brittany Sherron (Honors Thesis Advisor, 2015); Brian Ning (Honors Thesis Advisor, 2014) Page 6
TEACHING AND RESEARCH INTERESTS: History of political thought; Contemporary political theory; Legal theory and late modern law; Political responsibility and ethics; Critiques of late modernity; Secularism and religious commitment Page 7